I am looking forward to debates, door to door canvassing, person to person discussions, and a vital exchange of ideas. The Ward can only benefit from the exchange of ideas. May the best candidate win!
Somethings that will be different in my campaign?
1. Many articles published in Unpublished.com
2. Nomination filed May 1st
3. Businesd cards ready
4. Blog heavily populated
5. Mobile Campaign office
5. Campaign Canopy
6. Links to Twitter and other social media
7. Clear Campaign
8. AI didn't exist in 2022!
A) anti pandering..if elected I will not run for re election
B) I support a new east end bridge, King does not. Start planning now, not NIMBY
C) I bring project manager experience. I CAN SPEAK WITHOUT NOTES!
D) I do not have King's track record of quitting or pandering
E) I advocate for use of AI in government, open data and data analytics
F) public washroom policy is urgent
G) More at use lead filtration now!
H) simplicity in sanitation at picard
I) MORE PHYSICAL SEPERATION FOR CYCLISTS
J) 24 SUSSEX, WE NEED A VOICE AT THE TABLE
K) promote full self driving transit to feed the lrt
Try it you may like it



My digital assistant can do the following:
ReplyDelete1. Content Creation & Publishing (Biggest Time Saver)Draft, edit, and optimize your blog posts, Unpublished.ca opinions, campaign updates, or LinkedIn/X threads.
Turn one idea (“LRT metrics for Ward 13”) into a full post with data tables, bullet points, and suggested images.
Schedule or prepare ready-to-post versions for X, your blog (peterkarwacki.blogspot.com), Facebook, or LinkedIn.
Maintain a content calendar for Peer Metrics services + campaign themes.
2. Research & Intelligence GatheringDaily/weekly digests on Ottawa transit/LRT, city council decisions, Ward 13 issues, or peer-group benchmarking opportunities.
Competitor or peer research for Peer Metrics clients (e.g., other consulting firms, curling clubs, professional associations).
Summarize reports, news articles, or council agendas so you only read what matters.
Track municipal election developments, candidate filings, or local polls.
3. Business Development for Peer MetricsDraft proposals, emails, or LinkedIn outreach for new consulting gigs (TM1/BI projects, peer group assembly, project management contracts).
Prepare peer-group benchmarking templates or one-pagers.
Monitor RFPs from government departments (EDC, NRCan, Health Canada, etc.) that match your secret clearance and PMP background.
Update your websites (peermetrics.ca, kayak9.wixsite) with fresh case studies or testimonials.
4. Campaign Support (2026 Ward 13 Run)Draft platform planks, door-knocking scripts, or newsletter copy focused on metrics, accountability, transit solutions (e.g., elevated railbeds), and your “one-term promise.”
Analyze Ward 13 demographics and metrics (you already post these — I can expand them into visuals or comparison charts).
Prepare responses to common voter questions or opposition points.
Track incumbent activity and local issues.
5. Personal & Creative SupportGenerate art prompts or descriptions if you want to experiment with AI-assisted ideation for portraits.
Summarize river preservation or environmental news.
Help organize trip notes, Bitcoin/Ethereum wallet reminders, or personal project tracking.
6. Communication & AdminDraft professional emails or replies (I can write in your voice once you give a couple of examples).
Summarize long threads or documents you forward.
Help structure meeting notes or lessons-learned documents from consulting work.
How to Get Started (Zero Effort on Your End at First)Just say something like:“Draft a blog post on elevated railbeds for Ottawa LRT”
“Give me a weekly Ottawa transit news summary every Monday”
“Write a Peer Metrics outreach email for curling clubs”
“Prepare 3 campaign social posts about accountability”
Or forward me any link/document and tell me what you want done with it.
So who am I?Direct, no-nonsense, and pragmatic: Straight talk with a touch of frustration at bureaucracy or incompetence (“Fire them all!”, “What are we, mouth breathers?”). You call out problems plainly without heavy ideology.
ReplyDeleteMetrics-driven + practical: Heavy use of numbers, comparisons (e.g., Tokyo vs. Ottawa washrooms, ward stats, crime rates). You love tables, lists, and data to make points.
Common-sense / everyman tone: Short sentences mixed with longer explanatory ones. Occasional rhetorical questions or vivid everyday imagery (“Gotta Go, in life and in death”, “crap on the streets less than 1 km from Parliament”).
Focus on results over promises: Emphasis on “HOW” not just “WHAT”, accountability, one-term mindset, and fixing basics (transit reliability, washrooms, housing, governance) before grand gestures.
Slightly folksy / personal: References to real-life experience (kayaking, door-knocking, project management). Dry humour or blunt observations.
Structure: Often starts with a hook (problem statement), piles on evidence/metrics, ends with a clear call or judgment (“Voters, do your duty!”, “elevated railbeds are the preferred option”).
1. Grok Tasks (Built-in & Easiest — Recommended Starting Point)Go to grok.com/tasks (or via the Grok interface: profile → Tasks).
ReplyDeleteCreate a recurring task with a prompt like:“Every Monday at 8 AM: Summarize the latest Ottawa LRT/transit news and Ward 13 issues from the past week. Output in Peter Karwacki’s direct, metrics-heavy voice with 3–5 bullet points and a suggested social post.”
“Daily at 7 AM: Draft 2–3 X/LinkedIn posts in my voice about accountability, transit, or Peer Metrics services.”
“Every Sunday: Compile peer-group benchmarking opportunities or government RFPs matching PMP + secret clearance.”
Grok runs it on schedule (cron-style), processes live data (web/X), and delivers results via in-app notifications, email, or push.
You can monitor, edit, or pause tasks anytime.
This is perfect for your recurring needs (weekly transit digests, content calendar, campaign updates).2. Zapier + Grok Integration (No-Code Workflows)Connect Grok to 7,000+ apps: Gmail, Google Calendar, Notion, Slack, LinkedIn, X, Sheets, etc.
Examples tailored to you:New Google Doc or Notion note → Grok drafts a polished blog post in your voice → save to Unpublished.ca folder or email it to you.
New email from a potential Peer Metrics client → Grok summarizes + drafts a proposal reply.
Scheduled trigger (daily/weekly) → Grok generates campaign content → posts to X/LinkedIn or adds to a content calendar.
Monitor local Ottawa news or council agendas → alert you only on high-relevance items.
3. Make.com (formerly Integromat) + GrokMore powerful/visual than Zapier for complex flows (e.g., multi-step research + drafting + formatting + saving to multiple places).
Strong private integration for xAI/Grok.
4. xAI API (For Custom/Developer-Level Automation)Full access via api.x.ai (OpenAI-compatible).
Build your own scripts, agents, or connect to custom tools (e.g., auto-post to your Wix/blog, pull Ward 13 metrics from spreadsheets, trigger on specific X mentions of your name/campaign).
Combine with function calling for advanced agentic workflows (research → draft → review → notify).
5. Other OptionsAlbato, Relay.app, or similar — no-code alternatives to Zapier.
Custom agents/Groklets — persistent custom versions of me tuned to your voice and knowledge base.
Simple manual + this chat — pin our conversation and just say “Run my weekly transit task” when you want it on demand.
Quick-Start Recommendation for YouTry Grok Tasks first — it’s native, zero extra cost on Premium, and directly handles most of what we discussed (content, research, summaries).
Once you see it working, layer on Zapier for delivery (e.g., email + auto-save to Google Drive/Notion).
Would you like me to:Walk you step-by-step through creating your first Grok Task right now?
Suggest 3–5 ready-to-use Task prompts optimized for your campaign + Peer Metrics?
Or outline a specific Zapier workflow?
Ottaea LRT truly sucks. https://www.accessnewswire.com/newsroom/en/business-and-professional-services/data-analysis-reveals-ottawas-7-billion-lrt-investment-increased-1120585
ReplyDeleteCBC reported as follows:
ReplyDeleteCoun. Rawlson King, council's first and only Black member and the police service's co-chair of the community equity council, made it clear he stood with Deans. He defended the police services board, saying it had asked the "toughest questions" during three weeks of disruptive protest.
King announced his own resignation during the council meeting. His announcement stymied his colleagues' plan to overhaul the board with King playing a "key role" in consulting with communities who have been "over-policed."
Many councillors pleaded with King to stay on the board. Coun. Mathieu Fleury, close to tears, told King he's been "the moral leader" of council.
King refused, and will be replaced by Coun. Jeff Leiper.